Sports
2010 W/Cup: Whither Africa’s Soccer?
The ongoing World Cup football tournament in South Africa entered its crucial stage on June 27 when 16 nations qualified into the second round of the global soccer competition.
The thrills and excitements of the world’s foremost soccer tourney have been remarkable, although the performances of five out of the six African nations that started the 32-nation championship have been dismal, resulting in their early exit.
Only the “Black Stars” of Ghana qualified into the round of 16 and carried the banner to the last seconds of the quarter final clash with Uruguay.
Expectedly, the crash of Algeria, Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire, Nigeria and South Africa has dominated discussions and analyses by soccer pundits on radio and TV talk shows in Pretoria, South Africa.
Many of them — former soccer stars who played for their countries at different points in time — are quite unhappy about the fate of African teams at the championships.
Lucas Radebe, a former captain of the South African national team, “Bafana Bafana’’, could not hide his feelings about the poor performance of African teams at the World Cup competition.
According to him, the dismal showing reveals that African countries have not prepared well for the championship.
“It’s indeed a sad commentary for the continent that only Ghana could make it to the next group stage.
“May be, we should start re-thinking our strategy for future tournaments through early preparations,’’ he says.
Abedi “Pele’’ Ayew, a former captain of the “Black Stars’’, Ghana’s national team, says that most African teams lacked tactical discipline.
“The teams lack the ability to finish in front of open nets. The players created so many chances to score but wasted them eventually.
“It is a different thing for the South American and European teams who made good use of their own chances,” he says.
Abedi suggests that handlers of the African teams should improve on their tactical approach to the game, to make them excel in the future.
Former Super Eagles captain, Austin “Jay-Jay’’ Okocha, shares the sentiments of Radebe and Pele regarding the shortcomings of the African teams.
To him, early preparations and harnessing the potential of the abundant young talents constitute one way of ensuring that African teams excel in international tournaments like the World Cup.
“We need to prepare early for this kind of tournament. We also need to hunt for young talents on the continent and groom them in good time to mature for this kind of engagement,’’ Okocha says.
Another problem area identified by these analysts is soccer maladministration which, they say, has negatively affected the development of the game of football in Africa.
Mr Oliver Madiba, a resident of Durban in Kwazulu-Natal Province of South Africa, laments that football administrators in Africa do not initiate and operate follow-up programmes to develop the game.
“Football administrators lack continuity in their planning. In the period of ten years, for instance, some countries have had ten managers or coaches who handled their national teams.
“Also, you find a situation where youth programmes are not followed up and talents discovered from such programmes are sometimes left to roam around, seriously wasted,’’ he says.
Ike Anyene, Chairman of the Nigerian Union in Gauteng Province in South Africa, re-echoes Madiba’s sentiments.
He says that Nigeria, in particular, lacks the spirit of continuity in football administration.
“Can you imagine that a new manager was recruited to handle the national team just three months to the World Cup? Were we then expecting him to perform wonders?’’ he asks.
“Certainly, it is not possible to expect much from him,’’ he asserts.
Anyene also regrets that the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) has not been able to effectively mobilise the abundant soccer talents that had been discovered in the past and groom them for future championships.
“I am aware that members of the national Under-17 team that represented the country in the last FIFA U-17 World Cup tournament, which was hosted by Nigeria, remain largely unutilised.
“I urge the NFF to keep these boys together for the next CAF and FIFA U-20 tournaments and possibly use them for the 2014 World Cup that is scheduled to hold in Brazil.
“It looks like an uphill task but any purposeful football federation can do it and I bet you, they will get good results from the strategy,’’ Anyene says.
Another Nigerian, Osadebe Ibegbu, who is Chairman of the Nigerian Union in Durban, Kwazulu-Natal, says that the poor outing of the Super Eagles calls for sober reflections, with a view to ensuring better planning in the future.
“Indeed, the entire Nigerian community in Durban was not happy that the team could not win its last match against Korea, to qualify to the round of 16.
“It is now up to the NFF to re-plan their strategy for all future international engagements and the time to do it is now,’’ Ibegbu says.
Radebe, the ex-skipper of “Bafana Bafana’’, wants the issue of coaches and technical managers for Africa’s national teams to be decisively addressed
While some support the deployment of indigenous coaches, others express preference for foreign ones, who they think are technically superior and better exposed.
A female analyst, Christiana Buthulezi from Bloemfontein in the
Free State Province, says that she prefers indigenous coaches who could communicate with their players in languages that their opponents would not understand.
Other analysts, however, say that there are brighter prospects for African teams in future championships, if they learn to put their acts together through early preparations.
They also underscore the wisdom in grooming young talents for the national teams of countries.
They point at the Ghanaian example of harnessing young talents as an illustration, stressing that the young footballers collectively saw Ghana through to the second round of the ongoing World Cup tournament.
Nine of the Black Stars graduated into squad from Ghana’s U-20 team, the analysts note.
Mboye writes for NAN
Mike Mbonye
Sports
NCF targets success after W’Cup outing
Nigeria’s Junior Female Yellow Greens ended the tournament as the sixth-best nation, creating huge upsets against test-playing nations New Zealand and Ireland.
The team’s historic performance drew more attention to the game in Nigeria, and Akpata believes the NCF can achieve more by fostering strategic partnerships with brands and relevant stakeholders ahead of subsequent tournaments.
Having started the year on a bright note with the Junior Female Yellow Greens outing, NCF presidents noted that it was in line with the board’s strategic plans for the year.
“We redefined expectations as we went along and these girls deserve all the accolades they are getting. Having said that, this is not just happening by chance, it is four years in the making,” Akpata said at the reception organised by the NCF for the team last Friday.
“We have six targets. For the female team, we want to break into the top 20 in the world and the top 25 in the world for the male so that we can go and play in the Challenge League where we can play the ODI, that’s a different status.”
According to Akpata, the U-19 women’s team performance has aided the NCF’s plan to sell itself to potential partners.
“One of the key things again is that we now have a brand we can sell so we are going commercial. Let people also recognise that they can invest in the cricket brand. Before the World Cup, we got two requests from international companies including one in Costa Rica saying they want to have their names on our outfit. But I paused and thought I’d rather prefer a Nigerian brand. That’s what these girls have done. Hopefully, we will launch the Nigerian Super League this year as well.”
Other Nigerian national teams will also be in the mix to qualify for more World Cups this year, beginning with the men’s U-19 team, which will host other countries in Lagos by April. The men’s senior team are billed for the final phase of the men’s T20 World Cup qualifiers in November.
Sports
IBF Cancels purse bid for Ajagba, Bakole elimination bout
The International Boxing Federation has cancelled its scheduled Thursday purse bid hearing for the heavyweight title elimination bout between Nigeria’s Efe Ajagba and Congo’s Martin Bakole.
The fight, which was previously announced by Riyadh Season head Turki Alalshikh for a May 2 Ring Magazine show in New York City, will now likely proceed through private negotiations between the fighters’ promoters.
The scrapping of the purse bid indicates that the IBF has removed the fight from its usual bidding process, where different promoters would compete for the rights to stage the bout.
This suggests that sufficient evidence was presented to the governing body to allow the promoters to negotiate terms privately.
This development doesn’t necessarily affect the status of the fight itself but rather changes how the financial aspects will be determined. Instead of promoters submitting sealed bids to the IBF, BOXXER and Top Rank can now directly negotiate the terms for their respective fighters.
There is also a chance that this means that the fight will be cancelled or indefinitely postponed.
Both heavyweights feature in The Ring’s top 10 rankings, with BOXXER-promoted Bakole at No.6 and Top Rank’s Ajagba at No.10.
The winner of the bout will become the mandatory challenger for IBF heavyweight champion Daniel Dubois, who defends his title against former WBO champion Joseph Parker on February 22 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Bakole (21-1, 16 KOs) enhanced his reputation with a stunning fifth-round knockout of previously unbeaten American prospect Jared Anderson last August at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles. The victory marked his 10th consecutive win since his October 2018 stoppage loss to Michael Hunter.
The 33-year-old Congolese knockout artist, now based in Scotland, has been seeking major opportunities since his impressive victory over Anderson on Riyadh Season’s first venture into the US market.
Ajagba (20-1, 14 KOs), a 2016 Rio Olympics super heavyweight representative, has won his last five fights since suffering his lone professional defeat to Frank Sanchez in October 2021.
The Nigerian pugilist, who now trains in Houston, Texas, secured the biggest win of his career in his last outing, earning a split decision victory over Guido Vianello in Corpus Christi, Texas last April.
Dubois (22-2, 21 KOs), ranked No.2 by The Ring, awaits the winner of the elimination bout, as he prepares to defend his title against third-ranked Parker (35-3, 24 KOs) in Saudi Arabia.
Sports
Aruna, renew rivalry at Singapore Smash 2025
Quadri Aruna
The intense rivalry between Nigeria and Brazil in table tennis will be reignited as two of the best players from these nations, Quadri Aruna and Hugo Calderano, clash in the second round of the Men’s Singles at the WTT Singapore Smash 2025.
Exactly one year after their last encounter at the 2024 WTT Finals in Doha, the Nigerian star will face off against the Brazilian sensation in what promises to be an explosive match between continental champions.
Calderano holds a slight edge, having won two of their three previous meetings. However, Aruna has the psychological advantage, having triumphed in their most recent match in Doha.
Aruna began his campaign at the Singapore Smash 2025 with a hard-fought 3-1 victory over South Korea’s Oh Jungsun.
Despite losing the first game 8-11, the Nigerian turned the tide with an 11-8 win in the second game. The third game was closely contested, but Aruna’s fast-paced shots during the rally secured an 11-9 win.
On his part, Calderano dominated Portugal’s Marcos Freitas with a swift 3-0 win in the first round, securing his spot in the second round, where he will battle the African champion today.
With the exits of Egypt’s trio Omar Assar, Mohamed El-Beiali, and Youssef Abdelaziz, Aruna remains the only surviving African in the Men’s Singles.
In the Women’s Singles, Egypt’s Hana Goda celebrated her 17th birthday with a first-round win over Spain’s Maria Xiao.
Competing in her fifth WTT Grand Smash event, Goda aimed for her first-ever singles win on this prestigious stage. Facing Xiao for the first time, the Spaniard took the early lead, but Goda fought back to win 7-11, 13-11, 11-5, 12-10, marking another milestone in her budding career.
However, her compatriots Dina Meshref and Mariam Alhodaby were eliminated in the first round, leaving Goda as the only surviving African in the Women’s Singles. Goda will face China’s Ma Kuai in the second round, aiming to extend her stay in Doha.
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